Taiwan, claimed by China as its own territory, has complained of
increased harassment by Beijing's armed forces over the past
three years, including fighter jets flying near the island and
drones buzzing offshore islets.
Taiwan's army said that late Thursday morning its forces on
Dongyin island, part of the Taiwan-controlled Matsu archipelago
off the coast of China's Fuzhou, observed an unknown object
falling from the sky, then found the remnants of a balloon on a
shooting range.
The sphere is about 1 metre in diameter with an instrument box
marked with simplified Chinese characters - which are used in
China but not Taiwan - and the wording "Taiyuan Radio No. 1
Factory Co., Ltd.", "GTS13 digital datmospheric sounding
instrument" and "meteorological instrument", the army said.
Taiyuan is a major city in northern China. Reuters was not
immediately able to locate contacts for the factory.
"The preliminary investigation determined that the remains were
of a meteorological detecting instrument, which have been
collected by the relevant departments for further evaluation,"
Taiwan's army said in a short statement.
Taiwan's defence ministry said on Tuesday it had not spotted any
surveillance balloons from China in its vicinity, as a dispute
between China and the United States over spy balloons triggers
worries about rising military tensions.
Dongyin sits at the top of the Taiwan Strait on an important
passage for any southbound Chinese forces from the eastern
province of Zhejiang if they attack Taiwan, and the island is
well defended.
Last year, Taiwan said a small, propeller-driven Chinese
aircraft flew very close to Dongyin in what the government said
they suspected was China deploying a civilian aircraft to test
the responses of the Taiwanese military.
China also deployed drones to buzz Taiwan-controlled islands
near the Chinese coast last August when Beijing staged war games
near Taiwan, which only ended after Taiwanese forces shot one
down.
(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Hugh Lawson)
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